People use hospital emergency rooms as their doctors when they get sick or have minor problems.
You fail to ask yourself, "Why do people do this?"
The answer is that it's too expensive to get general and pre-emptive care.
And it is these high prices that private insurance companies have to deal with.
You've got it exactly backwards: The high prices are caused by private insurance companies extracting their profits from the flows between patients and health care providers.
Why can't they just pull that decommissioned vessel to somewhere above the Mariana Trench and then sink it?
The bottom of the Marianas Trench is not the Earth's interior.
Radioactive? We live on the surface of a planet with a very, very hot interior, and it is the Radioactive Shits such as Uranium / Plutonium / whatever -ium which provide all the warmth
Only about half the heat of the interior is the result of radioactive decay—most of the rest is heat energy left over from the Earth's formation, with a small amount also being due to gravitational pressure.
Depends on who "they" are, and whether they have a legitimate reason to access such data.
The issue is not with the taking of images, using facial recognition tech, or knowing that you're in or out of the country. The issue is whom this information gets shared with, how it can be used by them, and what safeguards it's under.
Not necessarily. It's entirely possible for régimes to change. So it's reasonable for Tadeusz who got political asylum in 1985 to be perfectly OK with going to visit his cousin in Poznan today.
No, they'll just use it to cross-reference your other data AND know that you're out of the country.
(Congratulations, you apparently don't know anything about databases AND you didn't even bother to read all of the summary before posting silly questions.)
Thing is, on linux it does tend to mess up your hardware to the point of bricking it, whilst on windows, well, from personal experience, it didn't happen that much.
try it lmsensors on linux or on windows, some program to read out temp and set fan values.
I've been running gkrellm on all manner of different hardware for a dozen years, and I've never had it—or any other Linux software—brick a machine. I interpret your assertions to mean that you know even less about what you're doing than I do, and I am by no means what I'd consider an expert.
This was settled 50 years ago. Or am I the only one in the room who remembers a little thing called the Outer Space Treaty, to which the US is a signatory?
If he had his way we'd go back the the 50s with mandatory prayer in schools (yes, that was a thing until a SCOTUS decision shut it down).
The 50s? I remember having prayers read over the school intercom system every morning when I was in school, and I'm not THAT old, thank you very much. Try the late 60s/early 70s.
Engel v. Vitale was decided in 1962, but it took some time for it to, um trickle down.
I realise that there are some exceptions to this relating to things like easements that may technically be privately owned, but these are cases wherein the state—not the owner—determines that the land is in some way productive in the public interest, and so I think the point stands.
You can't claim that every square inch of land could become productive land.
For all land that's not owned by the state, there's an owner paying taxes on it. Whether or not the owner deems the land "productive" has no bearing on this fact.
IMHO Heritage Foundation needs to face a proper criminal investigation.
You'll have no argument from me on that score. These are the folks who say the cure for poverty is to take money away from the poor and give it to the rich, and they're largely responsible for the making of The Great Global Warning Swindle.
You can fix that problem by painting the cables with Tabasco. It doesn't even need to be full-strength—a 10-15% solution should do the trick nicely, IIRC.
(That was about 25 years ago. A few years later, I moved across country and couldn't take them along. Still miss the little buggers sometime—I hope the kids I gave them to took good care of them and had as much fun with them as I did.)
https://rationalwiki.org/w/ima...
I count less than 4 months to the flip-terms--er, mid-terms.
People use hospital emergency rooms as their doctors when they get sick or have minor problems.
You fail to ask yourself, "Why do people do this?"
The answer is that it's too expensive to get general and pre-emptive care.
And it is these high prices that private insurance companies have to deal with.
You've got it exactly backwards: The high prices are caused by private insurance companies extracting their profits from the flows between patients and health care providers.
The Nazis didn't start Germany's social welfare system—Bismark did that back in the 1880s, before most of those guys were even born.
It's sooo cute how you ignore words that might make a dent in your narrative.
You and AHuxley both appear to be confused about what "permanent resident" and "citizenship" mean.
Meanwhile, I'm not the least bit confused about your obvious lack of empathy for and desire to kick out those damned foreigners. Strawman much?
Just how much immigrant ancestry do you yourselves have, anyway? I'll tell you: It's 100%. Just like everyone else on the planet.
So you think it's OK to strip someone of their lawful permanent resident status or even citizenship just because they came from a different country.
Thanks for confirming your xenophobia and disregard for the law. Not to mention your xenophobia and callousness. Oh, and your xenophobia, too.
Why can't they just pull that decommissioned vessel to somewhere above the Mariana Trench and then sink it?
The bottom of the Marianas Trench is not the Earth's interior.
Radioactive? We live on the surface of a planet with a very, very hot interior, and it is the Radioactive Shits such as Uranium / Plutonium / whatever -ium which provide all the warmth
Only about half the heat of the interior is the result of radioactive decay—most of the rest is heat energy left over from the Earth's formation, with a small amount also being due to gravitational pressure.
If I'm so ignorant, feel free to enlighten me.
But, no, you're not doing that, are you?
And my fragile ego is just fine, thanks.
Depends on who "they" are, and whether they have a legitimate reason to access such data.
The issue is not with the taking of images, using facial recognition tech, or knowing that you're in or out of the country. The issue is whom this information gets shared with, how it can be used by them, and what safeguards it's under.
They lied.
Not necessarily. It's entirely possible for régimes to change. So it's reasonable for Tadeusz who got political asylum in 1985 to be perfectly OK with going to visit his cousin in Poznan today.
No, they'll just use it to cross-reference your other data AND know that you're out of the country.
(Congratulations, you apparently don't know anything about databases AND you didn't even bother to read all of the summary before posting silly questions.)
Here, arm yourself with some knowledge, for a change: The park is in France.
Thing is, on linux it does tend to mess up your hardware to the point of bricking it, whilst on windows, well, from personal experience, it didn't happen that much.
try it lmsensors on linux
or on windows, some program to read out temp and set fan values.
I've been running gkrellm on all manner of different hardware for a dozen years, and I've never had it—or any other Linux software—brick a machine. I interpret your assertions to mean that you know even less about what you're doing than I do, and I am by no means what I'd consider an expert.
Apparently you don't know what cookies are or how to remove them. Thanks for playing!
So... I'm not the only one who remembers this, after all, hey!
This was settled 50 years ago. Or am I the only one in the room who remembers a little thing called the Outer Space Treaty, to which the US is a signatory?
If he had his way we'd go back the the 50s with mandatory prayer in schools (yes, that was a thing until a SCOTUS decision shut it down).
The 50s? I remember having prayers read over the school intercom system every morning when I was in school, and I'm not THAT old, thank you very much. Try the late 60s/early 70s.
Engel v. Vitale was decided in 1962, but it took some time for it to, um trickle down.
s/all/most/
I realise that there are some exceptions to this relating to things like easements that may technically be privately owned, but these are cases wherein the state—not the owner—determines that the land is in some way productive in the public interest, and so I think the point stands.
You can't claim that every square inch of land could become productive land.
For all land that's not owned by the state, there's an owner paying taxes on it. Whether or not the owner deems the land "productive" has no bearing on this fact.
IMHO Heritage Foundation needs to face a proper criminal investigation.
You'll have no argument from me on that score. These are the folks who say the cure for poverty is to take money away from the poor and give it to the rich, and they're largely responsible for the making of The Great Global Warning Swindle.
The alternative is mandatory national ID that shows your citizenship status. Is this what you really want?
I never tried to nibble on the cables myself, so it always WFM.
You can fix that problem by painting the cables with Tabasco. It doesn't even need to be full-strength—a 10-15% solution should do the trick nicely, IIRC.
(That was about 25 years ago. A few years later, I moved across country and couldn't take them along. Still miss the little buggers sometime—I hope the kids I gave them to took good care of them and had as much fun with them as I did.)
I use SkypeIn to give family and a few other people in the US a way ring me directly overseas without it costing them anything.